NINTENDO GAMECUBE/WII
This time I will let GAF handle it, because we already have a very detailed and helpful tutorial for these ones. Please look into this.
As for Gamecube games, after your Wii is homebrewed, you can download Cleanrip which will rip the ISO on your USB dongle just like USB-Loader does.
You can find Cleanrip here: https://code.google.com/archive/p/cleanrip/downloads
Excuse me if this question crosses the line, but what is the practical and moral difference between downloading a rom of a game you own and making a backup yourself? Is there a legal distinction between them?
Excuse me if this question crosses the line, but what is the practical and moral difference between downloading a rom of a game you own and making a backup yourself? Is there a legal distinction between them?
Ugh, i think i'd rather buy another dreamcast than go through that when my baby dies.
I didn't know it'd be that tough, i thought i would be able to put my discs into my PC when i eventually need to.
Thanks for this thread, I was casting about for info on how to dump DS games and this seems like a good place to collect that info.
There seem to be other ways to dump DS carts but they all seem to require a DS or DS Lite--no DSi, no 3DS. Too bad the SMS4 is so hard to get.
Also, Game Boy/color games can be ripped with a N64 Transfer Pak.
Find a GDR-8164B on ebay for around $5 and use Rawdump 2.1. It will rip GC and Wii discs without needing a Wii. The only "downside" being that you'll either need a motherboard with IDE or a suitable adapter.
I didn't look into it, but maybe the OP could add instructions for ripping ROMs from PC collections, like the Sega and Neo Geo classics on Steam? I also think you can rip ROMs from Virtual Console on Wii, so that's another way to legally acquire these games without resorting to eBay (even better because people actually get paid this way).
There are instructions for the Sega Genesis Classics Collection on PCGamingWiki. I'll just copy/paste them below:
Run in Other Emulators
Extract *.pak files with QuickBMS
- Download QuickBMS.
- Download the Sega Classics script (further down the page).
- Run QuickBMS and choose the Sega Classics script.
- Choose the installation folder containing the *.pak files.
- Choose the folder to save extracted ROMs to.
- QuickBMS will now extract the ROMs. Press ↵ Enter when done to exit QuickBMS.
- The ROMs are now extracted and named appropriately, ready for use with a different emulator.
Also, Game Boy/color games can be ripped with a N64 Transfer Pak.
If I still had all of those old carts, I'd surely do this. But I don't.
So what are the legal/ethical consequences on downloading ROMs of games you owned?
If I still had all of those old carts, I'd surely do this. But I don't.
So what are the legal/ethical consequences on downloading ROMs of games you owned?
Explain this sorcery.
Thanks a bunch for this, will add this to the OP tomorrow once I'm on a decent CPU!
I know it's possible to extract Wiiwares, but I'm not aware of the methods, that's why I didn't add it here, any reliable tutorial I could add here tomorrow?
This I never heard of though, please explain.![]()
well, first off you need an everdrive 64. That's quite a big hurdle...but still:
http://micro-64.com/features/gbromdumping.shtml
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It's how I dumped all of my GB/GBC games.
But there's isn't much difference in downloading a game you own instead of dumping it yourself. You end up with the same file, the only difference it the method. Not all people can dump their own games.Technically speaking, you're not supposed to download roms even for games you currently own.
Excuse me if this question crosses the line, but what is the practical and moral difference between downloading a rom of a game you own and making a backup yourself? Is there a legal distinction between them?
Permanent save game backups. Hell some pokemon would NOT be something you could recreate or train 100% the same way. Plus not all games have saves for them online like Culdcept which is a card collection game that has hour long matches sometimes between unlocking 7 random cards out of 500 with no guaranteed new or non repeats.
Permanent save game backups. Hell some pokemon would NOT be something you could recreate or train 100% the same way. Plus not all games have saves for them online like Culdcept which is a card collection game that has hour long matches sometimes between unlocking 7 random cards out of 500 with no guaranteed new or non repeats.
Wait I wanna do some ps2 ones but it's not as easy as you put it. How do you actually play them? The emulators are hard to run as I have games but my ps2 is FD. Don't you need something from the PS2? Can't recall
Funny enough, the reason I started looking into DS cart dumping was the exact opposite: I wanted to play a pristine copy of Infinite Space, and there's no way to get rid of the save data on the cart. I thought initially that maybe someone had figured out how to hack the cart data to remove the database stuff, or that maybe one of the emulators could do it. Now that I have a new NTSC copy coming to supplant my used PAL copy, though, my thoughts turn to dumping the new cart and playing that on an emulator instead so as to save my cart from being "tainted."
Last I remember, you needed a BIOS dump from your PS2 to run PCSX2. Dunno if that's still the case, though.
....yeah that's what I meant.
But there's isn't much difference in downloading a game you own instead of dumping it yourself. You end up with the same file, the only difference it the method. Not all people can dump their own games.
Pre-dumped ROMS can also be useful in other ways. For instance, someone may have a collection of PAL games. Most PAL versions of console games are junk and not everyone has monitors that support 50hz anymore, even in Europe. I don't see anything wrong with someone downloading a NTSC version of his PAL game so it can be properly displayed.
But there's isn't much difference in downloading a game you own instead of dumping it yourself. You end up with the same file, the only difference it the method. Not all people can dump their own games.
Pre-dumped ROMS can also be useful in other ways. For instance, someone may have a collection of PAL games. Most PAL versions of console games are junk and not everyone has monitors that support 50hz anymore, even in Europe. I don't see anything wrong with someone downloading a NTSC version of his PAL game so it can be properly displayed.
well, first off you need an everdrive 64. That's quite a big hurdle...but still:
http://micro-64.com/features/gbromdumping.shtml
It's how I dumped all of my GB/GBC games.